GlobeNewsWire

Benetech Expands Bookshare’s International Reach in India

390,000 books available for people with reading barriers including blindness, low vision, and dyslexia

Palo Alto, Calif., June 27, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Benetech, the leading software for social good nonprofit, announced a major expansion of the ongoing international effort to provide Bookshare, an ebook library for people with reading barriers, in India. Benetech continues to build on its commitment to extend the benefits of Bookshare around the world to empower individuals with reading barriers to achieve independence, acquire education and employment, and live fuller lives.

“Living in the technology-driven twenty-first century should mean equal access and equal opportunity to literacy and education for people with learning differences or disabilities,” says Brad Turner, VP Global Education. “Benetech has been working to provide accessible books in India since 2008, and we have built a powerful coalition of partners and a solid ecosystem serving over 13,000 Bookshare members with a collection of more than 390,000 English, Hindi, Tamil, and Gujarati accessible books. Additional funding enables us to bring even more books to more individuals with disabilities in India.”

According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 285 million people worldwide are visually impaired, 90% of whom live in developing countries. Globally, less than half of children from this population receive an education. Children with visual and learning disabilities who are unable to read standard print face many obstacles. Many classrooms lack accessible reading materials that allow students to progress and learn at their own pace. In developing countries such as India, those obstacles are multiplied.

Benetech’s work with Bookshare in India addresses these challenges head on. Building on previous work funded by World Vision, USAID, the Australian government, and Google.org, this expansion, funded by the Lavelle Fund for the Blind, leverages the power of technology to make reading and information more inclusive in India with a special emphasis on the school-age population. The project will put local curriculum from across India into Bookshare, add more local language books, establish more libraries, train more teachers, and create websites in a variety of languages including Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, and Gujarati. Memberships will be available for free to qualifying persons with disabilities in India – regardless of ability to pay.

“Students with disabilities use Bookshare to download textbooks on mobile phones to access reading materials anytime and anywhere at no extra cost,” says Dr. Homiyar Mobedji, Disability Expert and Bookshare Program Manager in Asia and Africa. “This initiative has made the dream of inclusive education a reality, where students with reading barriers can study in a mainstream class. Thousands of students in India have benefitted from this technology revolution that provides access to far more knowledge than what was possible using traditional methods.”

In 2013, UNESCO reported that if all students in low income countries left school with basic reading skills, 171 million people could be lifted out of poverty, which would be equivalent to a 12% cut in world poverty. Join us in supporting Benetech’s work to expand access to education and literacy in India.

About Benetech

Benetech is a nonprofit that empowers communities with software for social good. Our work transforms how people with disabilities read and learn, makes it safer for human rights defenders to pursue truth and justice, and connects people to the services they need to live and prosper. We’re constantly pursuing the next big social impact. Visit www.benetech.org.